Part-time waitress Rosalynd Harris wasn't expecting a $450 tip when she showed up for her shift at Busboys and Poets on a rainy January Friday. Harris has worked at the Washington, D.C. restaurant for nearly two years, a politically-themed establishment that she calls "nowhere near conservative."

It was the same day Donald Trump was inaugurated into the White House.

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Harris says a group of three men from Texas entered the restaurant and sat down at one of her tables. The University of the Arts graduate chatted with the patrons, just like she does with all of her customers at Busboys and Poets.

"It was a regular exchange, they were very cordial, they asked all the normal questions you would get from customers," Harris, also a political activist, tells us Sunday. "It wasn't anything that was out of the ordinary. It was very calm."

Harris, who isn't a Trump supporter, was shocked when the men left her a $450 tip on a $72 check.

"It was nice, given the weekend that it happened," she explains. "It was inauguration weekend, then we had the women's march, so much going on in that span of time, and these two polar opposite experiences in one small city. It was interesting to have that kind of interaction."

"He never said that he was a Trump supporter, that was never a conversation, we never talked politics the entire time," she said. "However, on the note, he did say he wanted to be able to have interactions that weren't based on color or gender, but as one people. Put the political aside. It was a nonverbal consensus we came to. I may have my views and he may have his, but at the end of the day, he was a good person and he treated me with kindness and respect."

Busboys and Poets shared a photo of the receipt on its Twitter account. The post went viral. Harris hopes the small gesture will help repair the nation's current divisive political climate.

"Although we do have our differences, we get a lot more done by finding ways to work together," she said. "We're treating Trump's presidency as if he's this dictator, and it doesn't have to be like that. We can find a way to create healthy confrontation. I think we can find ways to make it better for everyone."